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ATI INC (ATI)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 delivered solid A&D-led growth and margin expansion: adjusted EBITDA rose 14% YoY to $207.7M (18.2% of sales) and adjusted EPS was $0.74, both above Q1 levels; revenue was $1.14B, up 4% YoY but flat sequentially .
- Mixed vs Street: EPS beat consensus ($0.74 vs $0.713*), EBITDA was modestly above ($207.7M vs $204.9M*), while revenue modestly missed ($1.140B vs $1.156B*). Guidance raised midpoints for FY adjusted EBITDA and FCF; Q3 guide set at EBITDA $200–210M and EPS $0.69–$0.75 .
- A&D strength was anchored by commercial jet engines (+27% YoY; A&D 67% of total), while airframes remained flattish due to customer destocking; industrial markets were pressured by tariff-driven order pauses and macro softness .
- Strategic catalysts: newly expanded Airbus and Boeing LTAs (share and pricing gains), titanium sheet capacity online, $250M buybacks executed with $270M authorization remaining—key supports for the equity narrative into H2 and 2026 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong A&D momentum: commercial jet engines sales +27% YoY; A&D mix reached 67% of total sales ($762M), supporting margin expansion (adj. EBITDA margin 18.2%) .
- HPMC margin strength: HPMC segment EBITDA margin rose to 23.7% (from 22.4% in Q1), aided by favorable nickel/specialty alloy pricing, mix, and productivity; management highlighted incrementals north of 40% normalized .
- Contract wins and capacity: expanded Airbus titanium LTA (more than doubles prior support) and Boeing airframe agreement; titanium sheet operation (Pageland, SC) and titanium melt brownfield up and qualifying, adding 35% titanium melt capacity and unlocking $125–$135M run-rate revenue potential next year .
What Went Wrong
- Airframe destocking: commercial airframe sales down sequentially (Q2 $195.2M vs Q1 $205.8M) and YoY decline reflects inventory rebalancing; FY airframes outlook held flat vs 2024 .
- Industrial softness and tariffs: order activity subdued in certain industrials (construction/mining, food equipment) due to tariff uncertainty and macro; management cited customers delaying orders and preferring non-U.S. suppliers to avoid tariffs .
- AA&S margin step-down: AA&S segment EBITDA margin fell to 14.4% (from 14.9% in Q1; 16.4% in Q2 2024) on volume/timing, partly offset by $2.6M deferred retention credits; AA&S recovery expected H2 with margins 15–16% .
Financial Results
Consolidated Performance vs Prior Year, Prior Quarter, and Estimates
Estimates vs Actuals (Q2 2025):
Values with asterisk (*) retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Breakdown
KPIs (Q2 2025)
Non-GAAP adjustments: Q2 adjusted results exclude pre-tax special items of $7.4M (after-tax $5.7M; $0.04/sh) .
Guidance Changes
Management’s end-market assumptions: >20% jet engine growth for 2025, double-digit defense growth, flat airframes vs 2024 on destocking, non-A&D down 5–7% .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Q2 was another strong quarter… Adjusted EBITDA reached $208 million… Adjusted EPS came in at $0.74… Our adjusted EBITDA margin reached 18.2%.” — Kim Fields, CEO .
- “We signed a new long-term guaranteed volume agreement with Boeing… and a significantly expanded agreement with Airbus… positioning ATI as Airbus’s top supplier of titanium flat-rolled and long products.” — Kim Fields .
- “For the third quarter, guidance for adjusted EBITDA is $200 to $210 million… Full year narrowed to $810 to $840 million… adjusted EPS $2.90 to $3.07… Free cash flow $270 to $350 million.” — Don Neumann, CFO .
- “Industrial end markets are flattish… tariff impacts on order activities… non-U.S. customers preferring non-U.S. suppliers.” — Don Neumann .
- “HPMC incrementals were very favorable… expecting HPMC incrementals ~40% going forward; margins north of 24%.” — Don Neumann .
Q&A Highlights
- Airframe destocking and widebody ramp timing: inventories normalizing; expect signs of demand in Q4; Boeing 787 ramp supportive; new LTAs de-risk pricing and margins .
- Capacity outlook: discrete nickel melt debottleneck investment (~$50M) adds 8–10% capacity in 2026; titanium EB2 up and qualifying; incremental revenue potential $125–$135M from brownfield melt capacity .
- Industrial/tariff dynamics: distribution customers delaying orders; U.S. customers preferring U.S. producers; ATI contracts/surcharges mitigate cost impacts; defensive on margins .
- Aftermarket (MRO) demand: sustained high shop visits (e.g., LEAP) through decade; ATI has >2x content on next-gen engines; aftermarket remains a major value driver .
- Forgings share gains with GTF and long lead times: shipments to Pratt nearly match full-year 2024 in H1; further 50% growth next 1–2 years; lead times into 2027 .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025 vs consensus: EPS beat ($0.74 vs $0.713*), EBITDA above ($207.7M vs $204.9M*), revenue modest miss ($1.140B vs $1.156B*). Expect Street to modestly lift margin/EBITDA assumptions and narrow FY ranges to management’s updated guide. Values with asterisk (*) retrieved from S&P Global.
- Q3 snapshot: Street sees revenue ~$1.124B*, EPS ~$0.74*, EBITDA ~$206.0M*, broadly aligned with guidance ($200–$210M EBITDA; $0.69–$0.75 EPS). Values with asterisk (*) retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Margin story intact and strengthening: adj. EBITDA margin at 18.2% with segment mix and pricing tailwinds; H2 margins expected ≥18% with HPMC ≥24% .
- A&D engine cycle drives visibility: >20% 2025 jet engine growth, MRO tailwinds, sole-source alloy positions underpin multi-year profitable growth .
- Airframe headwinds are timing-related: destocking pressuring titanium volumes; LTAs and new sheet capacity position ATI for the widebody ramp and share gains into 2026 .
- Industrial softness likely transient: tariff uncertainty and macro weigh on orders now; recovery can accelerate quickly once policy signals stabilize; contracts mitigate cost impacts .
- Capital allocation supportive: $250M Q2 buyback executed; $270M authorization remains; FCF midpoint raised; capex maintained with customer co-funding opportunities .
- Model implications: raise FY adj. EBITDA midpoint to $825M (mgmt $810–$840M) and FCF midpoint to ~$310M; temper near-term airframe volumes while keeping HPMC margins elevated .
- Watch catalysts: Q3 print vs guide, airframe order normalization signs in Q4, Airbus/Boeing LTA implementation, nickel/titanium capacity qualification milestones .
Notes:
- All document-based figures and quotes are cited to ATI’s Q2 2025 8-K press release and earnings call transcript.
- Values marked with * are retrieved from S&P Global (consensus estimates).